Excavations in Dover

EXCAVATIONS IN DOVER By L. MURRAY THRBIPLAITD A FEW war-damaged sites in the centre of Dover were stUl avaUable for excavation and the results are given below. The excavations were carried out on behalf of the Dover Excavation Committee. SITE 6. MARKET SQUARE. (Figs. 2, 3) In 1949 Mr. E. H. Bayly and a number of volunteers started work on the west side of the Market Square, on the site of the east end of St. Martin-le-Grand which had been later built over by the Carlton Club and various shops. The area had been bombed during the 1939-45 war, and part of the debris was removed by bulldozer to assist excavation. In 1950 a larger area was uncovered, and again, boys from Dover CoUege and Dover Grammar School helped considerably. The excavation showed the principal part of two rooms and parts of others with evidence of four main periods of occupation. There are no tesseUated pavements or concrete floors, but one floor is very carefuUy constructed and there is evidence of an upper room with painted wall plaster. It is possible that these are the lesser quarters of the fine building1 found in 1881 on this site when the cellars of the Carlton Club were excavated. In the first two periods the walls must have supported a timber superstructure, but were eventually carried up in chalk in a late second-century rebuUd. The complexity of building and alterations to these rooms is shown by plans on Fig. 3. An important factor in the early buUding on this site was the fall away of the ground level to the east. In Period 1 (Fig. 3), the chalk foundations of the east waU of Room A (Section A-B, Fig. 4) were dug into the clay subsoU and the ground levelled up beyond it. This made ground contains a considerable number of sherds including Samian c. A.D. 130-140. The floor of Room A was carefully constructed: first, with roughly squared tufa blocks (Plate I, a) laid on the original turf, with larger chalk blocks buttressing the foundations of the walls and the whole covered by a layer of clay, then a level of beach shingle2 topped with another layer of clay whose surface had been hardened and reddened by fire (Section C-D, Fig. 4). 1 Arch. Journal, XXXVIII, 432, and Arch. Cant., XX, 120. 2 Still used as a floor make-up. v. Arch. Cant., LXD7, 1961, Fig. 4. 14 EXCAVATIONS IN DOVER D O V E R . PLAN SHEWING WAR DAMAGED AREAJ IN THE CENTRE OFTOWN,AND EXCAVATION.! -J1TE ITAKC MARKET SQUARE ff Kg. 1. 15 [Crown Copyright reserved EXCAVATIONS IN DOVER DOVER.1950. MAIN PLAN OP SITE AT MARKET SQUARE. i x> V/77//?77/////////////M WAMM j 3 & ROOM.A ROOMB. I >UC'K£lt/ *£ WALL boor/ / L'0CK?6 eZZZI=WALLJ OF PERIOD 2. SCALE IROOM.C. Kg. 2. DOVER 1950 MARKET JOUAR.E PERIOD 1 PERIOD 1E23.PERI0D U,VMLLJ BUILT ON MADECROUND • PERIOD Z SCAltOFFtET PERIODS *"~ W I £LA? tMUDJUftFACC. H U HAT>p«ltf • 2ATIR HjOCV.tD •••PERIOD 5.WALU HEIGHTENED & REBUILT 'EST » PCRIODJA.DOOW BLOCKtD.CLAY PLATFORM IVAtB • M . PERI0D4.P0JT DESTRUCTION REBUILD E22U0LDWALLJ JTILL UTILISED Fig. 3. 16 EXCAVATIONS IN DOVER At roughly the same time (Period la), on the made ground to the east, the walls of a room were built which must have abutted onto Room A. Inside the room was a level of clean sea sand (not seen on Section A-B) presumably acting as bedding to a stone slab floor which had been removed. A hearth (Hearth 2) associated with the floor had burnt a hollow in the east wall of Room A. DOVER 1 J 5 0 MARKET SQUARE SECTION C-D L A T E R L E V E L L I NG CTgjQQ^1, © FALLEN DIBRIJ © CHALK FLOOR. # ^ b - f r i j ^ f l &J f M FC08TC i m3 BD H I N C LE N O R T H JOUTH M B . W A L L OF PER.IOD2 W A L L . ! OF PERIOD 3 SECTION A-B V/W/ft • WALLOFPERIODL L A T E R L E V E L L I N G O® © o Os D wm,. S\ff i o Cc2 F A L L E N DEBRIJ O^CbJS © I o I RECENT FOOTINGS tHEARTH o © C L A V t U U D \J CHALK 1 A L K " - 0 0 © OCCUPATlOmy FOUND Wl® ATIONJ WE.JT MADE G R O U N D S M LDT I I f j a g ^ M . W A L L OF PERIOD IA : TUAJT iiii.'i'-itj^'^i JCAU OF FF£T Eig. 4. But these walls sank so badly towards the east on the made ground (Section A-B) that they had been razed and new walls erected north and east of them (Period 2). Puddled chalk floors were made over the razed walls and up to the two new walls forming Rooms B and C. A cross wall was built across Room A too, dividing it into A and D, and puddled chalk floors also made in them. In Period 3 a considerable reconstruction was carried out. All the walls with the exception of that dividing Rooms B and 0 were built up (the south wall of Rooms A and B a foot behind the earher wall) with 17 EXCAVATIONS IN DOVER chalk blocks, replacing the presumed timber superstructure, and door openings were left through the north wall of Rooms A, B and C. Trampled clay floors were made over the whole area above the earher chalk ones. Some time later (Period 3a) the door openings were blocked up and a small buttress built on the north outside the blocked door of Room A. A gap or door, in the west wall of Room A too was roughly filled in so that there was now no entrance to that room except from above. In view of this, it was interesting to note two clay " platforms " measuring about 3-4 feet square set at this time in the north-west corners of Rooms A and B. They had more or less level tops but sloped down towards the floor on the sides away from the walls (Section C-D, Fig. 4). I t seems possible that they may have served as bases for wooden steps or ladders. After this the orderly succession of building and rebuilding was interrupted by some disaster. In Period 36, Room A is filled with debris probably coming from the room above, burnt timbers, broken pieces of painted wall plaster, sherds and lumps of opus signinum, and Rooms B and C are full, too, of fallen debris. The pottery in these levels contain late second-century types with carinated pie dishes predominating, and perhaps the destruction of the house could be attributed to the last years of that century. Rather unusual, however, are the numbers of short sections of " drain pipes " (they are discussed more fully below) made from a dozen or so different moulds which are found in the burnt debris of Room A. About the middle of the third century A.D. there are signs of reoccupation (Period 4). Although the top of the most northerly wall had been nearly obhterated and in places was covered with mud, a wall, only two courses of which now remain was built almost, but not quite, on the line of it (Pig. 2 and Plate 16), and a puddled chalk floor put down over the fallen debris. The other waUs appear to have been still standing and to have been reused. This re-occupation was abandoned in its turn, and the floor became covered with faUen building material. Trampled into the top of the rebuilt waU of Period 4 in two main concentrations (Pig. 2) and into the top of the fallen debris adjacent, were some seventy odd coins, belonging to the latter part of the third century A.D. It is difficult to account for their rather curious distribution, and it is possible that later when the whole area appears to have been levelled up, two small hoards, one perhaps in a box (see below, p. 26) in the wall were partially dislodged or broken up and were trodden into the adjoining ground surface. Two similar coins found at the same level south of Room A may well have been carried there in the mud on feet or sandals. The levelling which contains fourth century A.D. material possibly repre- 18 EXCAVATIONS IN DOVER sents the preparation of the site for the building of St. Martin-le-Grand. A grave (Grave I) was dug into the top of one of the earher chalk walls and was filled with the later levelling material—the filling containing a coin of the House of Theodosius I (A.D. 388-395). It held the extended skeleton of a middle-aged man with his head., pointing west, pillowed on a hollowed chalk block. The top of the grave had been sheared off by the bulldozer so that it was impossible to see from what level it had been sunk. I am indebted to Professor A. J. E. Cave, Department of Anatomy, St. Bartholomew's Hospital Medical School, for the following notes on this skeleton. " The cranial and more equivocally the pelvic characters of this skeleton indicate with fair probability its male provenance. From the condition of the cranial sutures and the degree of dental crown wear the age of death . . . may be estimated as between 40 and 50 years. The estimated living stature was about 5 ft. 1\ in. The bossed occipital region of the skull, the condition of the teeth, the slight platymena and platycreumia of the lower limb bones and the general characters of the skeleton suggest an assignment to the Romano- British or early Saxon period. That is, the osteological features of the skeleton can be matched by human material of such periods." SITE 3. YEWDEN'S COURT (Fig. 5) Another attempt was made in the autumn of 1952 to locate the wall of the Saxon Shore fort. There was one area available crossed by the presumed hne of the medieval town wall, and it seemed possible that medieval builders might have made use of the massive structure of fourth-century Roman defences, if they existed. A first trench (Trench I) was dug roughly at right angles to a retaining wall at the north of the court, below which was a drop of two to three feet which was thought might represent the line of the medieval town ditch. It was found, though, that this trench itself cut through the filling of the medieval ditch which had been levelled in the early nineteenth century. A second trench (Trench II) was therefore dug as far east as possible and this revealed Roman and Medieval levels under a recent cellar floor. Unluckily the medieval town wall was much farther east than had been assumed and even the extreme eastern end of the second trench just failed to find its face, which lay beyond the area of the bombed site. The approximate line is shown on Fig. 1. It was, however, shown clearly that Roman levels extended west beyond the line of the medieval wall. A foundation of chalk blocks had been dug into the original ground level with an early second century A.D. poppyhead beaker in the filling overlying it. There were later levels : a floor level, Level 2, containing mid-second century sherds and overlaid by debris with early third century sherds, and another floor level, Level 4, 19 EXCAVATIONS IN DOVER which was overlaid in its turn by debris containing a coin of Tetricus (A.D. 270-3) and fourth century sherds. These Roman levels had been cut into by the wide, shallow medieval ditch and the foundation trench, packed with large flints, perhaps for the original medieval town wall itself or a later patching.1 Above the builders' debris by the wall and in the ditch are a number of later medieval levels, while above them is a deep fill, as in the first trench on this site, of early nineteenth century date. D O V E R 1951. YEWDEN J COURT. WEJT EAJT CELLAR WALL A CLAY FILL (RECENT) © / FOUNDATIONS i :Js=H ILS CLAY FILL(RECENT) C6» @12 UBBLE 5*1.11 IfcsJIW S UBBLE \ \ \ \ \ 2N • , \ w x \ 3)FrITLLT NTG Srw^ - 0 \ V TRENCH OF \ \s w\v\ LT\E TAYi I MEWDAIELVLA L? TOWN / CHALKBL 3 0KS CONCRETE ^v TURF / iiniiiiuiiiiiiiii MED I EVA NATURAL TOWN' SOIL? DITC ROMAN NDATION ROMAN LEVELJ © ~ © MEDIEVAL] LEVELJ © ~@ fr LATER. OF FEETV&& Eig. 5 SITE 10. BELOW THE UNITARIAN CHURCH (Fig. 6) In 1951-2 some trenches were dug, at the junction of Last Lane and Adrian's Street, in a war-damaged area below the Unitarian Church, where it was hoped to pick up a continuation of the Roman road found on Site 2. Trench XXXI only showed a Roman levelling of reddish clay, containing early second-century sherds, above the old ground For Saxon sherds on this site, see below, p. 36. 20 NORTH-WEST ^OUTH-EAJT C O N C R E T E DOVER MAKE-UP R E C E N T SITE BELOW UNITARIAN CHURCH. TRENCHEJ XXXoXXXlI 1551-2. RECENT R E C E N T ROOM LOOR CHALK WALL I MEDIEVAL LEVELS MEDIEVAL LEVELS DARK CLAV S ANDY- DEBRU LIGHT C L A Y s ^ r ^ ^ ! . ^ ; ' < ^ ! ^ : " ' . ' V r : ' ' . TRAM?Lt-i NATURALfOIL? (MAKE-UP iii|!i:i|illli|liii (T\ , BROWN DEBRIS '.'lllMlllyllllllllllll11- ROAD SHXilKi) ROMAN LEVELS©-® Fig. 6. [face p. 20 EXCAVATIONS IN DOVER surface which here sloped down towards the east, but Trenches XXX and XXXII showed a metalled and shingled surface leading steeply down, south-east, towards the old estuary of the Dour. This surface was laid partly on the old turf and partly on a chalk and clay ballast. A late first-early second-century A.D. sherd was found in a trampled level on the old ground surface, and a coin of Domitian in the make-up under the metalled surface, but the road metalling contained abraided Samian sherds of Antonine date. The later levels (4-7, Fig. 6) contain late second-third century sherds and a number of broken pieces of CLBR tiles, but the upper Roman levels in XXXII have been removed by a medieval pit. The extent of the metalling was examined by Mr. E. Bayly in another trench on this site, XXXIV, but it had been deeply disturbed by later pits and it proved impossible to say whether it represented a road or track or was part of a general hard on the slope leading down to the estuary of the River Dour. OTHER EXCAVATIONS Trenches dug by Mr. E. Field1 between Adrian Street and Snargate Street (Site 11, Fig. 7) in 1949 showed Roman walls and floors associated with pottery of late first-early second century date. In Trench XX west of this area the soil had been cut back and the cliff revetted in recent times, for the concrete ground floors of the war-destroyed houses lay directly on the natural soil. In 1955 modern excavations cut back into the former area revealing a fine section2 (Fig. 8). This shows on the east a cut through one of Mr. Field's rooms with an opus signinum floor3 and plaster-faced tufa and chalk block walls. There appears to have been a narrow passage or corridor outside this room on the west, the other wall of which has been destroyed by a recent sump. Beyond that a large room with plastered floor and plaster-faced chalk wall contained a different filling from the more orderly sequence farther east, for the floor was covered with a layer of black ash while the room was filled completely with debris of broken plaster, burnt material and tiles perhaps presupposing a local or a general disaster as on Site 6 (p. 18). This occupation was built on a hard artificial surface of puddled chalk over flints perhaps representing earlier building or a rammed hard or quay at the sea edge (see above). The section showed, too, the subsoil of the Dour valley overlying the steeply sloping chalk of the western heights. 1 I am indebted to Mr. Field for this information. For the excavation of the medieval Garde-robe on this site v. Arch. Cant, LXIX, 1956, 132. 2 Both Roman walls appear much wider than they actually are, as they are cut through at an extreme angle. 3 Utilized by later builders as their cellar floor. 21 EXCAVATIONS IN DOVER CONCLUSIONS Although Dover suffered severely in the second world war, the number of open spaces available for excavation in the old part of the town were individually small and often cramped by high containing walls, or cellars which in the main removed all but the deepest Roman L> \ &ARDCROB! O. fe \ >- \ SM I 7 \ \ RS: N \ ^ O 11 Fig. 7. levels. Thus knowledge gained of the Roman town was unfortunately limited. The known facts can be tabulated : 1. The occupation of the site between the Eastern and Western Heights seems to have started in the late first-early second century A.D. 2. In the middle of the second century A.D. buildings with chalk block walls, which must have supported a timber superstructure, and associated floors'were found on Site 2 and on Site 6. A road going roughly north-south, possibly the final stretch of the main road from Canterbury to the coast, was also located on Site 2 at this date, and a metalled area on Site 10, perhaps part of a hard along the foreshore (see above also for Snargate Street Section) contained Samian sherds of the Antonine period in the metalling. 3. In the late second century, chalk block walls replaced the timber superstructure on Site 6. The north-south road on Site 2 at this time was divided into three carriage ways by chalk gutters. 4. At some time at the end of the second century, Site 6 suffered destruction, but whether this was local or general in Dover it is impos- 22 EXCAVATIONS IN DOVER sible to say. There is possible evidence of a similar destruction in the Snargate Street Section 21. 5. Rebuilding of a sort took place on Site 6, but by the end of the third century the site appears to have been in a ruinous condition and two small hoards of coins were secreted in the walls or wall tops. 6. There is evidence of considerable fourth-century activity in the shape of sherds1 in later debris on aU sites, only in Level 5, Site 3 has actual occupation been found and there has been no sign of Saxon Shore fort defences. 7. Tiles bearing the stamp of the Channel Fleet (CLBR) have been found in second century contexts and again in third but only as broken fragments. 8. The Roman town, as it can be seen now, lay along the west bank of the Dour estuary and stretched from St. Mary's Church in the north to Snargate Street in the south and from Church Street in the east to beyond the medieval defences at Yewden's Court on the west. So far no defensive wall of any date has been found. ACKNOWLEDGMENTS My acknowledgments are due to the officers of the Dover Excavation Committee, and to the owners who permitted excavations on their property. I have been helped throughout by Mr. Edward Bayly of Dover College and by his archseologically-minded schoolboys, and I am grateful to Mr. E. Field for his notes on his excavations in Snargate. Mr. Eric Birley, M.B.E., F.S.A., and Miss Grace Simpson have kindly given notes on the Samian, and Mr. G. C. Dunning, F.S.A., on the Saxon and medieval sherds. The late Mr. B. St. J. O'Neil, Chief Inspector of Ancient Monuments for the Ministry of Works, made notes on the coins and it was to his untiring interest that the Dover Excavation Committee owed not only its inception but also a continuing fund of enthusiasm and advice. COINS By the late B. H. ST. J. O'NEIL, F.S.A. Site 6. Hoards Philip II as Caesar (A.D. 244-246) 1. Obv. M.IUL. PHILLIPPVS CAES. Head radiate right. Rev. PRINCIPI IWENT. Philip II standing left holding globe and standards ; at foot a captive. M. & S. 219. 1 See also coin of A.D. 383-396 in Grave 1 (Site 6). 23 EXCAVATIONS IN DOVER Gallienus. (Sole Reign, A.D. 260-268) Obv. GALLIENUS AVG. Head radiate right. Rev. [APOLLINI CONS AVG]. Centaur to right, drawing bow. Mint. Z (Rome). Antoninianus. M. & S. 163. Obv. As last, head radiate right. Rev. Illegible. Mint. Illegible. Antoninianus. Obv. As last. Rev. MAR [TI PACIFERO]. Mars left with olive branch, spear and shield. Mint. A| (Rome). Antoninianus. M. & S. 236. Obv. As last. Rev. ? SALVS AVG. Salus feeding snake rising from altar and holding cornucopiae. Mint. Illegible. Antoninianus. Obv. As last. Rev. VBERTAS AVG. Ubertas standing left with purse and cornucopiae. Mint. |e (Rome). Antoninianus. M. & S. 287 var. Obv. As last. Rev. Illegible. Claudius II (A.D. 268-270) Obv. [IMP CLA] VD [IVS AVG]. Bust radiate (?) cuirassed right. Rev. VIRTUS AVG. Soldier standing left holding spear and shield. Mint. [Ill (Siscia). Claudius II (posthumous) A.D. 270 Obv. DIVOCLAVDIO. Head radiate right. Rev. CONSECRATIO. Altar aflame. Antoninianus. M. & S. 261/262. Obv. [DIVO CLAUDIO]. Head [radiate] right. Rev. [CONSECRATIO]. Altar [aflame]. Probus (A.D. 276-282) Obv. IMP C PROB. Bust radiate. Rev. Illegible. Antoninianus. 24 I W E i T D O V E R . . 1955, .SECTION BETWEEN ADRIAN .STREET AND ..SNARGATE STREET. EA.ST. RECEMT DEBR.U" fcECENT CELLAR. CHALK FACED ROMANS WALL.PLAiTER FACED INTERNALLY.": HAI.K, RECENT CELLAR BOMB DEBRIJ FLOOR . 177 „,°//CLA.Y CHALK, FACED ROMAN WALLMJU-IIDR TUFA CORE \ 1 M PLAJTERxX FACEDS\ \\ INTERN ALL-. m ^ m RECENT SUMP RECENT CELLAR ,;;-^;.<^-::!f*w ROMAN r-3«-: ^cfl-m !fl,o i i / i i i i l \W \ i \ t / \ w ^ t^^^—^X \ \ / FIG. 14. Saxon pottery (J). 1. Middle of late Saxon cooking pot, roughly wheel-turned, fired very hard and with a harsh, matt, grey surface. The rim is everted, flat on the upper slope, and the body has a wide zone of broad shaUow grooves and deep sagging base. The type has been found at several sites on the coast of East Anglia : Caistor-by- Yarmouth, from huts of the middle Saxon period ; Framlingham Castle in the same level as a Frankish bronze ornament of the seventh or eighth century ; Ipswich, many cooking pots from a pit, some are wasters indicating a kiln near by ; Bradwell-on-Sea in the upper layer of the filling of the ditch of the Roman Shore Fort, probably equals the occupation at the time of buUding St. Cedd's Chapel in A.D. 654. Sherds from both levels (8 and 6) of the same type and ware though possibly not from the same pot have been drawn together here as a type specimen. 2. Black carinated rim, hand-made in black sandy ware with weU-tooIed surface. Pagan Saxon (sixth or seventh century). Level 8. 36 EXCAVATIONS IN DOVER 3. Sherd of wheel-turned grey ware with stamped pattern from Frankish (or Jutish) bottle of about seventh century. For the type see B.M. Anglo-Saxon Guide and B. Faussett, Inventorium Sepulchrale. Level 6. Site 10 4. Hand-made pot with carinated shoulder, coarse grey ware with stone grits, the surface is smoothed by toohng but is uneven and lumpy. Pit 2. 5. Hand-made foot-ring base of sandy grey ware with dark grey surface. Pit 2. These might be late Roman (fourth century), more likely to be Saxon, probably Middle Saxon. Medieval . Site 10. Trench XXX (Fig. 6, medieval levels) The sherds have not been drawn but are mainly paralleled with earlier finds from Dover (Arch. Cant., LXIV, 143-7 and Canterbury, Arch. Cant., 1946, p. 74, etc. ; 1947, p. 98, etc. ; 1948, p. 37 ; 1954, p. 128, etc.). There is a httle possible twelfth century, but the sherds are mostly thirteenth century. There is a smaU sherd of imported French white-buff ware with red painted stripe of late eleventh or twelfth century, cf. pitcher from Snargate, Dover, Ant. Jour., XXV, 153. 37

Previous
Previous

The Follies of Kingsgate

Next
Next

The Cult of the Dea Nutrix in Kent